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Alaska Airlines: Note on wing 'not the best approach'
(CNN) -- It's not the kind of view you want from the window seat: a damaged wing flap with a handwritten note on it saying "we know about this," with an arrow pointing to the area in question. (www.cnn.com) Más...Sort type: [Top] [Newest]
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(Duplicate Squawk Submitted)
Dear Flight Mechanic...you're doing it wrong.
A well intentioned flight mechanic for Alaska Airlines leaves a hand-written note on the flap pointing out a missing chunk of metal. The flight crew may have appreciated it, but not the best way to make passengers feel secure...
http://www.stuff.co.nz/travel/travel-troubles/7439398/Crew-give-wrong-sort-of-message
Dear Flight Mechanic...you're doing it wrong.
A well intentioned flight mechanic for Alaska Airlines leaves a hand-written note on the flap pointing out a missing chunk of metal. The flight crew may have appreciated it, but not the best way to make passengers feel secure...
http://www.stuff.co.nz/travel/travel-troubles/7439398/Crew-give-wrong-sort-of-message
Just use duct tape, that will keep there.
Years ago (1968 I think), I took a flight from Ft. Lauderdale to Freeport in the Bahamas on a now defunct airline (Mackey). It was a prop job, DC 6 I think. As I sitting in my seat I was gazing out at the wing and saw a big circle, about 6 feet across, whith "CRACK" written beside it. Sort of gives you confidence in the airline, doesn't it?
This coming from an airline who can't fix jack screws on DC-9's, Where everyone died in the crash into the ocean off the coast of California.
we used to circle those type of defects with grease pencils andlet the plane fly until next phase not a big deal